Official Ukrainian & Bangladeshi Government Resources
Official government bodies and authoritative sources relevant to Ukraine immigration for Bangladeshi applicants — with plain-language explanations of what each authority controls and what you actually use them for.
Ukrainian immigration requires checking multiple official government sources — on both the Ukrainian and Bangladeshi side. BMET Bangladesh controls overseas worker departure clearance. The Ukrainian Embassy in Dhaka handles visas. The State Employment Service (DSZ) issues work permits. The State Migration Service (DMSU) issues TRP cards. The MFA Ukraine sets fee schedules and consular requirements. Knowing which body controls which part of the process is essential for navigating it without relying entirely on agents.
Each resource page explains what that official body does, what part of your immigration process it handles, how to contact it directly, and what information it makes publicly available — so you can verify what agents tell you against official sources.
Verify before you pay: Every claim an agent makes about requirements, processing times, or permit status can be checked against official sources. If an agent refuses to let you independently verify their documents with the DSZ or DMSU, that is itself a red flag. These official resource pages tell you exactly how to do those checks.
BMET Bangladesh
Bureau of Manpower, Employment and Training — what it is, why BMET Smart Card clearance is mandatory for all departing workers, how to register, and what BMET actually verifies.
EmbassyUkrainian Embassy in Dhaka
Embassy of Ukraine in Bangladesh — Banani address (House 3, Road 23, Block J), consular section hours, which visa categories the embassy handles, current appointment procedure, and contact channels.
VFSVFS Global Bangladesh
VFS Global as the Ukraine visa application centre in Bangladesh — what VFS does and does not do, how to book an appointment, fee schedule, and what to bring on the day.
Ukraine MFAUkraine Ministry of Foreign Affairs
MFA Ukraine official consular portal — visa application forms, fee schedules by nationality, consular contacts in Dhaka, and official visa category definitions.
DMSUState Migration Service (DMSU)
Ukraine's DMSU — the authority that issues TRP cards, the biometric registration process, which regional offices Bangladeshi applicants interact with, and how to track application status.
ReferencesGovernment References
All Ukrainian government sources cited on this website — relevant laws, Cabinet of Ministers resolutions, DSZ regulations, and official government portals with direct URLs.
DSZState Employment Service (DSZ)
Ukraine's DSZ (Державна служба зайнятості) — the authority that issues work permits for foreign nationals. How employers file, what DSZ verifies, regional office contacts, and how to check permit status.
How to Use Official Sources
Official government sources for Ukrainian immigration are authoritative but not always easy to navigate — particularly for applicants outside Ukraine who do not read Ukrainian. Here is what to look for and why unofficial sources are unreliable:
Use .gov.ua and .gov.bd domains only
Official Ukrainian government sites end in .gov.ua. Official Bangladeshi government sites end in .gov.bd. Any site claiming to be an official Ukrainian immigration resource that does not have a .gov.ua domain is not an official source. This includes Dhaka-based "visa agent" websites that replicate official-looking content, Facebook pages that claim to post official announcements, and WhatsApp channels claiming to have "insider" government updates.
What to look for on DSZ and DMSU sites
The State Employment Service (DSZ) publishes the current work permit application requirements, fee schedules, and regional office contacts at dcz.gov.ua. The State Migration Service (DMSU) publishes TRP application requirements and regional office information at dmsu.gov.ua. Both sites have English-language sections, though the Ukrainian versions are more complete. Use browser translation (Google Chrome's built-in translation) if needed.
Why unofficial sources are unreliable for immigration information
Ukrainian immigration requirements change — fees are revised, document lists are updated, processing procedures change. Unofficial sources (immigration forums, Facebook groups, agent websites, YouTube channels) lag behind official changes and sometimes never update at all. An agent giving you a document checklist from 2022 may cause a rejection at the DSZ in 2026 because requirements have changed. Always cross-check document requirements against the current official DSZ or DMSU guidance before submitting.
Check the EDRPOU registry for employer verification
Every legitimate Ukrainian employer has an EDRPOU company registration number. The EDRPOU registry is publicly searchable at usr.minjust.gov.ua — you can check whether a company exists, whether it is active (not in liquidation), and whether its industry code matches the job being offered. This is a free, direct government check that takes less than five minutes and is the first thing to do with any Ukrainian employer offer.
We only advise based on what official sources say
Every piece of guidance on this website is grounded in what official Ukrainian and Bangladeshi government sources actually state. We do not advise based on "agent knowledge," forum posts, or informal sources. When official requirements change, we update our guidance — and we tell clients when something we previously advised has been superseded.
If an agent gives you information that contradicts what the DSZ or DMSU says on their official sites, the official site is correct. The agent is either misinformed or telling you what you want to hear. Our role is to help you read and apply the official guidance accurately.
Want us to check something against official records?
We can verify employer EDRPOU codes, check permit numbers in the DSZ database, and confirm whether the documents you have been given match what official records show. Free for a single check; full document audit available as a paid service.
Request a verification checkA written eligibility assessment ($30) is the lowest-risk first step — written by a Ukrainian-licensed lawyer, delivered in 2–3 working days.